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#1
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Before it was outlawed, could you smoke pot openly?
I've read that weed was banned only in the begining of the 1900's. So before then, could a person openly smoke it? Could Abe Lincoln have been smoking legal weed?
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#2
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Hell, in Ann Arbor you'd only be fined $5 for doing it.
And that law wasn't changed until sometime in the 1990s. No kidding. |
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#3
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#4
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#5
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IIRC, his majesty's herb wasn't 'fully' illegal until the late seventies/early eighties in most places (in the U.S.). that is, due to its decriminalized status, you could carry up to an ounce, in one bag, of (and, depending on de facto laws, perhaps in public smoke a joint of) weed, and fear no real harassment or prosecution.
and then came ol' uncle ronnie. |
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#6
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#7
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To answer the OP,-- of course you can do something openly if it isn't illegal.
Now what you really want to know, perhaps, is a history of marijuana and the law. Quote:
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#8
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Marijuana was legal until the narcotic act of 1948. Some states did not pass laws aganst it untill the 70's but it was aganst federal law. Before '48 you could legaly smoke it in public, but most people had never even heard of it, except for Jazz musicans and mexican workers in the south west. It became popular when the government started a campain aganst it in order to pass the narcotic act. They used raceism aganst mexicans (witch is why we call it marijuana instead of hemp) and fear of hopped up blacks useing it to corupt white women. The gov. was aided in there campain by newspapers looking for higher circulation and by prohabitionist who were looking for another dog to kick after the failure of acohol prohabition. It is ironic that the campain to outlaw the herb is what made it popular with the mainstream. Some people maintain that Du Pont was behind the whole thing to get rid of hemp witch competed with nilon to make rope ( it wouldn't be the first time someone used the government to get rid of cheeper compatition) but I have not seen any proof of this so take it as you will. <ZZZZZZ##~~ 420
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Always keep your pants and your gun where you can find them in the dark. |
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#9
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I should state that marijuana was first made illegal by the Marijuana Tax Act of 1937 but was struck down by the suppreem court. Due to the fact that the government wasn't issueing any tax stamps for weed. It was finally outlawed by the Narcotic Act of 1948.
__________________
Always keep your pants and your gun where you can find them in the dark. |
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#10
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The court ruled, it looks like 9-0, with the decision written by Justice Harlan, that the law was unconstituional, because it required self incrimination..."If you have the marajuana, you have to declare it, or you'll violate the Tax Act, but if you declare it, you'll be arrested for violating posession charges." |
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#11
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(Note: If there is a "yes or no" answer to that, please post it; otherwise, let's not turn this into a gun control thread.)
__________________
'Never say "no" to adventure. Always say "yes". Otherwise you'll lead a very dull life.' -- Commander Caractacus Pott, R.N. (Retired) 'Do not act incautiously when confronting a little bald wrinkly smiling man.' -- Lu-Tze |
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#12
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It may not have been legal, but in the mid-70s I used to walk through downtown Boston and Cambridge and could easily smell folks smokin' the Evil Weed. They'd walk right past the police, with no results!
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"You know nothing, Sergeant Schultz" |
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#13
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Several times a year, where I am in California, I smell pot near the beach. It seems the surfers openly smoke it there.
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#14
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I've worked in NYC for 21 years now, I don't think a day has passed when I HAVEN'T seen (or smelled) someone walking down the street openly smoking pot.
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#15
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#17
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-- Beruang |
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#18
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A short History of Cannabis laws in the USA
(Source for above timeline: The History of the Marijuana Lawsby Charles Whitebread, Professor of Law, USC Law School) |
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